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First teletype was made in Germany around the 30s or 40s. One of the many types of teletypes was the Hellschreiber. There were also other types but all worked the same: you punch letters and they are remote printed to one or more receiving stations. After the war in the operations of confiscating the german patents, the US developed the teletype further. That's missing from your article.

AnonymousFri 14-Feb-2014 09:32

First teletype was made in Germany around the 30s or 40s. One of the many types of teletypes was the Hellschreiber. There were also other types but all worked the same: you punch letters and they are remote printed to one or more receiving stations. After the war in the operations of confiscating the german patents, the US developed the teletype further. That's missing from your article.

The Hellschreiber device is not a teletype, it's more of a facsimile machine. You pressed a letter, and a _bitmap_ of the letter was transmitted (twice to account for mechanical asynchrony). On the receiving side, marks and spaces were literally penned onto the paper, creating two copies of the text, one atop the other. Due to said asynchrony, it was often skewed, but because two copies were printed, nonetheless legible.

This is a very, very different mode of operation from the teletypes described above.

AnonymousFri 14-Feb-2014 09:45

First teletype was made in Germany around the 30s or 40s. One of the many types of teletypes was the Hellschreiber. There were also other types but all worked the same: you punch letters and they are remote printed to one or more receiving stations. After the war in the operations of confiscating the german patents, the US developed the teletype further. That's missing from your article.

I don't know of the history of teletypes in Germany, but the Teletype Model 15 was first produced in 1930 and was in wide use before and after World War II. Both in military and civilian contexts.

The Model 15 wasn't the first model produced by the Teletype corporation, but it was probably the most widely used pre-war model. It might have been the most widely used model, period.

Like I said, I don't really know anything about German teletypes, but looking at the Wikipedia page for Hellschreiber, that device is quite different than the Teletype corporation's devices. It looks like the Hellschrieber sends pixels and might actually be more similar to FAX machines than Teletype devices.

It's possible to run Zeugma using the Windows version of the VICE emulator; however, the VICE emulator will stomp on any REU save file that is not exactly the size that VICE expects it to be. Your story file will be full of zeros and Zeugma will report that it cannot run a story file of version 0. To work around this behavior, you will need to pad the z8 story file to exactly the size of the expected REU before loading it in VICE.

There is a padbin.exe file in http://www.pineight.com/gba/gbfs.zip which can be used to do this padding, with the following command line for a 512 KB emulated REU:

padbin.exe 524288 your-story-file.z8

Then you can load the padded file into the emulated REU and start zeugma.

johnwbyrdJohn ByrdWed 26-Feb-2014 00:03

Such beautiful and outstanding work on getting this emulator operational.

I confess however that for us emulator users, part of the attraction is the ability to have a "true" C64 experience... I would like to therefore politely request the ability to revert Zeugma back to classic C64 fonts and colors, perhaps via one of the function keys.